Help! My Boss is a Narcissist!

Last week my blog topic was how to spot a narcissist – this week we’re talking about what to do when you work for one.

Your job may not be so bad, but that jerk who authorizes your payroll makes it less than ideal.

It’s the worst, isn’t it? I’ve been there… I know.

My former (thank the heavens!) narcissistic boss was ridiculous. He had all the classic markers (if you miss last week’s blog, here’s a link!) but, of course, was blind to all of them. I think he may be president of his own fan club.

In addition to being utterly under-qualified for his job (he talked his way into it because like most narcissists – when you first meet them, they’re entirely charming, engaging, and convincing) & he was a complete wimp.

The problem with narcissists who are total wimps is that deep down they know what weaklings they are, and so they turn into bullies – they assert power over others just because they can. It makes them feel big at the moment – and pushes everyone else down.

My former narcissistic boss – let’s call him “Paul” – had a baby face and seemed really kind on the surface, but over time those of us who were misfortunate enough to have to work with him knew the truth. Paul was selfish, self-involved, made everything about (you guessed it) himself, and had few (if any) independent, creative, or useful ideas. He would take credit for other people’s great ideas, work, and progress – but when it came time for criticism, he’d happily pass that down to someone else. He was a total loser who my former co-workers and I were, for a time, stuck with.

Paul would call people into his office and have meaningful one-on-one conversations but then within a short period would stab that person in the back. He was always flip-flopping – changing direction and from the staff’s perspective lying… but Paul would deny lying. You see, in his alternate universe, he hadn’t told a lie at all. If anyone suggested that he’d contradicted a previous statement, he’d treat that person horribly.

How dare we accuse him of flip-flopping! All he had done was state continually changing versions of the truth that served the constantly changing priorities and purposes of the center of the entire cosmos (himself).

How do you work with someone like that?

How did I work with someone like that?

How do any of us?

I’ll tell you, it wasn’t easy – and I guess it goes without saying at this point that I don’t work with “Paul” anymore. (Again… thank the heavens!)

That said, there was a time I had to figure out how to deal with it, and I did – hopefully, with grace.

Here’s a simplified how-to plan to make the most out of dealing with your own frustrating narcissistic boss.

Understand the person.I’m not excusing them, but I’m trying to keep it real.
This “Paul” in your life is never going to change.
I found the following “poem” online – it’s dubbed “The Narcissist’s Prayer” and pretty much sums up this personality type – or at least the way a person who falls into this group looks at the world:

That didn’t happen.

And if it did, it wasn’t that bad.

And if it was, that’s not a big deal.

And if it is, that’s not my fault.

And if it was, I didn’t mean it.

And if I did…

You deserved it.

If you’ll just accept and understand who the person is, and that this warped (and entirely wrong) view of the world is your present reality because it’s who/how your boss is, it’ll help you not to play the “woe is me” game quite so much. It just “is what it is,” and the faster you realize that complaining won’t change one single soitary thing, the faster you can move on from allowing “Paul” to control your thoughts & suck the energy out of you.

Don’t “go there.”
Speaking of the “woe is me” game… just don’t.
If your co-workers are bad-mouthing the boss, just stay out of it.
The energy you all will spend talking about a topic about which you can do nothing is entirely nonsensical.
The more you talk about how worthless, frustrating, or (insert negative adjective here) your version of “Paul” is, the more upset you will be.
Put your emotional energy elsewhere and don’t give “Paul” more power than he already has.

Do not react. Ever.
When the narcissist goes into his/her serial behavioral patterns, take lots of deep breaths and do not react.
Reacting to this person’s alternate-reality behavior is only going to make everything worse.
All this person wants is a reaction, so the best thing you can do is not give it to them.
Just like a plant will die without soil, water, and light- the narcissist will die without reactions (well, maybe not die… but will stop pulling you in).

Flattery will get you everything you (never) wanted.
The narcissist needs flattery. They thrive on it.
They also chew up and spit out the people who give it to them.
So don’t do it.
Just stay back.
Giving flattery to a narcissist is like pouring lighter fluid on fire – it’ll make it worse, and you’ll get burned.
The more you flattery you give this person, the more inflated his ego becomes.
The more inflated his ego becomes, the more trouble it will spell for you.
Don’t.
Just don’t.

Take (copious) notes and fact check everything.
Narcissists portray themselves as either the victim or the hero – nowhere in the middle.
When you’re having a meeting with this person (especially a 1:1), write down everything.
When I was in your shoes, I’d even type up my notes and email them as a “favor” – asking “Paul” to fact-check them and let me know if any alterations needed to be made. That way when he would respond with something like “thanks – looks good to me.” I’d have proof, so when he flip-flopped, I’d both know I wasn’t the crazy one, and I would have justification if the flip or the flop included him coming down on me for acting on something he “didn’t say.”(psssst…. “didn’t say” is code for “most certainly without a doubt absolutely and directly said but then denied later”)

I think the most important thing you can do when you’re having to deal with a narcissistic boss is to stay focused on the mission.

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Dr. Jane Mims, PCC

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